Today's Featured Image is located along the inner wall of the crater, where the mare deposit meets the wall (24.935°S, 102.705°E). A section of the crater wall is visible in the upper left hand corner of the image, there is a step down in topography from left to right.

All along the inner wall of Bowditch there is a higher elevation ring, or terrace.

LROC WAC context image of mare-filled Bowditch crater. The yellow box outlines the field of view captured at high resolution in the LROC Featured Image released April 18, 2013. Field of view above roughly 38.3 km-wide. The LROC WAC context image accompanying the Featured Image released shows greater topographic relief at smaller scale HERE [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

It is thought that this terrace is a marker of the highest level of liquid lava within the crater. As the lava cooled and solidified within the Bowditch depression it subsided into the center of the depression, causing a lower final elevation of mare basalt towards the center of the crater. Lava terraces such as this one provide important clues about the thickness, viscosity, composition, and cooling rate of lunar lavas and will help us better understand volcanism on the Moon.

View the entire LROC NAC frame to explore more of the Bowditch mare basalt deposit, HERE.